Autism genome project

July 1, 2004

Autism is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder affecting thousands of Canadians. Although it is generally agreed that a strong genetic basis underlies the condition, the causes of autism are still unknown. Stephen Scherer at SickKids Hospital is project leader of the Autism Genome Project, an unprecedented initiative bringing together many of the leading geneticists, clinicians and genome scientists undertaking autism research in Canada, and linking to 170 other scientists from 10 other countries worldwide. This project screened the genomes from over 6000 members of 1600 families, to find where susceptibility genes reside along the chromosomes. The project, which identified 18 new candidate genes for autism spectrum disorder, and resulted in a publication in Nature, will incorporate genetic information about autism into health care delivery and policy development, and eventually lead to new and more accurate diagnostic tests.

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Development of a biocontrol agent

June 1, 2004

Researchers at the Natural Resources Canada Great Lakes Forestry Centre in aim to develop a Bacmid system – a transgenic virus to control a severe pest that causes hundreds of millions of dollars of damage annually.

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Segmental duplications in neurodevelopmental, neurological and behavioral disorders

January 21, 2004

There is individual variability in the genomic structure and the copy number of genes located at specific regions of the genome called segmental duplications or duplicons. These regions, which contain “molecular signatures” that facilitate rearrangements of genomic material on specific sites on chromosomal DNA, have been connected to neurological and behavioral disorders. Stephen Scherer and Xavier Estivill, and other Canadian and Spanish scientific research groups are studying these segmental duplications to accurately characterize them in large-scale DNA sequencing project for the first time, to gain further understanding on their role in neurodevelopmental, neurological, and behavioral disorder.

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Stem cell genomics

July 20, 2001

Stem cells have extraordinary potential to help in the treatment of some of our most intractable diseases—for example, diabetes, arthritis, stroke and neurological conditions such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. The full exploitation of their potential of stem cells requires greater understanding around the genetic factors of stem-cells. Michael Rudnicki and Ronald Worton determined which genes are active in stem cells using new methods of detection and analysis called DNA micro-arraying, Serial Analysis of Gene Expression and protein studies (proteomics). Their work created StemBase, the largest stem-cell gene-expression database in the world.

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The Biomolecular Interaction Network Database (BIND)

July 20, 2001

Human Genome Project researchers worldwide produce a huge amount of raw information about genes and proteins. This information must be turned into knowledge if it is to be useful for further studies and for practical applications. It must be organized into databases, analyzed in a great many ways and above all made available to researchers everywhere. In his team’s project, Christopher Hogue set up specialized databases used by genomic researchers around the world. This generated three main resources that contain crucial molecular-interaction data that are used by the worldwide biomedical research community: SeqHound, BIND, SMID databases for public use plus a large set of analytical software.

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Genomics of the spruce budworm and its viral pathogens

July 20, 2001

Canada is a custodian of approximately 10% of the world’s total forests. Occupying nearly 35% of our land mass, they are an enormous renewable resource of importance for recreation, the environment and the economy. Forests contribute approximately $30 billion dollars annually to Canada; about 10% of all the jobs in Canada are forestry-related. Basil Arif of the Great Lakes Forestry Centre, and Arthur Retnakaran of the Government of Canada used genomics to study one of the most devastating forest-insect pests, the spruce budworm. Their project developed a large body of knowledge about the genomics of spruce budworm and many of its naturally occurring viruses in addition to environmentally friendly methods that use insect viruses to control spruce budworm, and a way to produce large amounts of viral proteins that can be used for further development by the pharmaceutical industry, and veterinary and agricultural agencies.

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Mapping the genes influencing Cystic Fibrosis

July 20, 2001

Due to the pioneering work in the 1980s of researchers at the Hospital for Sick Children, it is known that all Cystic Fibrosis patients are defective in a gene called CFTR, which instructs the cell to make a protein that moves ordinary chlorine ions into and out of cells. Yet, even in patients with the identical genetic change in CFTR, the severity of Cystic Fibrosis can be very different – pointing to other genes interacting with CFTR to alter the course of the disease. Peter Durie of The Hospital for Sick Children and Lap¬Chee Tsui of the University of Hong Kong used the most up-to-date genomic methods to find these other genes. This project created the world’s largest repository of family-based cell lines for clinical-genetic studies, and further identified genes that potentially affect the severity of Cystic Fibrosis.

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Proteomics and functional genomics

July 20, 2001

Brenda Andrews and Cheryl Arrowsmith of the University of Toronto used functional and chemical genomic approaches to establish a comprehensive description of the biology of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. They used a variety of cutting-edge functional genomics approaches to define gene function and to probe the mechanistic basis for drug action and the characterization of novel, unknown and microbial proteins. They then identified the biochemical function of these proteins and made hypotheses about their cellular role in microbial cells. This new information has greatly extended fundamental knowledge about microbial biology and created an experimental basis for the development of novel anti-microbial drugs and biotechnological processes by Canadian biotech industry.

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Genetic determinants of human health and disease

July 20, 2001

Katherine Siminovitch of The Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute explored gene variants causing and/or modulating a number of common multigenic disorders, including Alzheimer’s, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer (breast, endometrial, prostate, ovarian, melanoma) and osteoporosis. In addition to knowledge relevant to the diagnosis and treatment of specific diseases, this program has provided new information and methods to improve technical platforms for genotyping, gene expression profiling and the computational management and statistical analyses of clinical and genetic datasets. Such tools are key to the exploitation of the human genome sequence for the purposes of disease gene discovery and, ultimately, for translation of genomic information to clinical and therapeutic applications.

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Functional genomic analysis of soil micro-organisms

July 20, 2001

One of the most important groups of bacteria in the world is also one of the least known by many people—microbes that cause the formation of nodules on the roots of many plants. Inside these nodules specialized bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen into a chemically useful form, which is essential for plant growth and thus ultimately for life on Earth. Using complex genetic methods, Turlough Finan and Brian Golding of McMaster University created a body of knowledge about S. meliloti – a bacterium which fixes nitrogen in the roots of plants, an essential process for plant growth- by using genomic methods to study how its genes direct nitrogen fixation and other important biochemical reactions. This deeper understanding of S. meliloti growth will lead to better and more environmentally friendly methods of nitrogen fixation for the food and agricultural industries in Canada and the world.

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